Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Read The Entire Contract Before Entering Into An Invoice Factoring Arrangement

Many companies who are in a cash flow bind, either because of poor profitability or accelerated growth, need a financing option that isn?t dependent upon their credit standing or internal financial ratios. Factoring is the obvious choice for entities in this situation because the focus for underwriting is on the credit worthiness of the client?s customers.

It should be made clear to the client at the onset of the relationship that the factoring company typically expects invoices to be factored for a period of time, usually for a year. In other words, there is a minimum amount of fees that will be charged whether the company factors invoices or not.

This is not usually an issue, as most companies that take advantage of factoring tends to use the service for one to two years. At that point, they usually have found a way to secure other financing. Other companies, however, need only a ?shot in the arm? by a one-time infusion of cash. For those firms, factoring may not be for them. They will be charged fees during the contract period for services that aren?t being used. On the other hand, having a steady stream of cash by not having to wait 30-60 days to collect receivables can be advantageous.

It is incumbent upon the factoring company?s representatives to clearly explain how the factoring process works. It is also imperative that the client and/or their attorney to review the commitment letter and contract in its entirety so there will be no surprises.

Kent Harlan has been a CPA since 1984 and has provided consulting, accounting and financial services to several industries. He is the owner of Ozarks Capital Funding, LLC, a Springfield, MO based company offering financing in the areas of accounts receivable factoring, equipment leasing, asset based lending, and healthcare provider. He is an active member in the Missouri Society for Certified Public Accountants and has written several articles for the Springfield Business Journal.

email: kenth@ocflink.com
Website: http://www.ocflink.com

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Factoring Companies: Learn the Top 7 Financial Questions to Ask to Choose the Best One for Growth

A factoring company advances funds to your business based upon the dollar amount of your company's outstanding account receivables. With a quality factoring firm, you no longer have to wait to receive money owed to you by clients. Each accounts receivable factoring firm may charge different fees, though. Here are the high level questions to ask each company to find the best situation for your firm.

Ask the following questions of your prospective factoring companies:

1. Ask each invoice factoring company how they determine fees to spot the best deal.

The fees that you would pay to accounts receivable factoring companies are based on the financial strength and credit worthiness of your customers. Specifics include:

  • How often you bill your customers,
  • how long your customers have been in business and
  • how quickly your customers pay your invoices.

2. Ask invoice factoring companies for a favorable advance rate and quickly increase your working capital.

When working with a factoring firm, you will submit outstanding invoices to them. They will then provide your business with cash based upon your "advance rate." Customary advance rates range from 75% to 90%, which means you would receive between $750 and $900 for each $1,000 of outstanding invoices submitted.

3. If an invoice factoring company offers you a "flat fee rate" ask about the implications and make the right choice for your business.

While flat fees may seem less complicated, the end cost can be substantially higher. With a flat-rate fee, the cost is the same whether the receivable is out for 10 or 60 days so, unless most receivables are out 45-60 days, the overall cost makes this type of rate more expensive.

4. Ask an invoice factoring company these questions about contract terms to avoid costly termination fees:

  • Is there a contract term,
  • how long would my contract term last,
  • is there an early termination fee,
  • is my contract automatically renewed if I don't cancel in writing and
  • if so, how much advance notice to cancel do you require?

5. Not all receivables factoring companies are alike: ask potential partners if they work with all clients.

Some receivables factoring companies, for example, will not fund companies with a high concentration, i.e., if their business is dependent upon one or two clients. Other companies do consider clients with concentration and they usually examine risk levels to determine a rate.

6. Make a savvy financial decision: ask about specific fees charged by receivables factoring companies.

Ask prospective factoring firms about the cost of the:

  • Application fee,
  • Due diligence fees,
  • Credit reporting fees,
  • Background or lien search fees,
  • Factoring company lock box fees,
  • Minimum monthly volume fees,
  • Charges to add a new receivables factoring client,
  • Early termination fees from receivables factoring contract,
  • Upfront advance fee and then an interest fee,
  • Fee for same day advances,
  • Monitoring fees,
  • Automated clearing house (ACH) fees and
  • Wiring fees.

Some invoice factoring firms have a flat rate fee that includes all services, except for the monthly Internet access report fee.

7. Ask how factoring companies calculate interest charges and choose the most favorable.

Some factoring firms begin charging interest as soon as an invoice is issued. Under this system, you could end up paying several more days' worth of interest than if your factoring company began charging interest on the date you receive funds. Also ask factoring companies if you can select what day of the week to receive your funds and pick what's best for your company.

Select a quality invoice factoring company now: get immediate funding to grow your business.

Now that you have the tools and knowledge to evaluate factoring companies, you can decide which factoring company will grow your business the fastest. Don't miss out on lucrative business opportunities because of poor cash flow any longer! Contact companies and get your factoring loans to get growing now.

Gage Price is President of MP Star Financial, an invoice factoring company. Gage worked his way up through the ranks as an invoice factoring salesperson and underwriter and received his MBA from New York University's Stern School of Business. Find out how to grow your business at MPStarFinancial.com.

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Saturday, July 12, 2008

Healthcare Staffing Factoring: How to Improve Your Cash Flow (Part One of Three)

In a world where it is becoming increasingly more difficult for a nurse staffing agency to receive timely payments from their customers, accounts receivable factoring can come to the rescue. Selling their invoices at a discounted rate, also known as factoring, gives healthcare staffing companies the money they need to help maintain and grow their staffing operations. Instead of waiting 30, 60, 90 days or longer for payment from their customers, factoring provides the cash needed to meet payroll, pay taxes, purchase software and/or increase staff. And all of this can be accomplished without increasing debt on a firm's balance sheet, which could limit future healthcare staffing financing alternatives. Healthcare staffing funding is best be utilized to bridge the gap between when an invoice is issued and when payment is received.

Another reason why nurse staffing agencies should look into selling their receivables is that factoring companies do not base their funding capabilities on a business owner's personal credit or even the company's credit history. Rather, companies providing healthcare staffing invoice factoring are most concerned with the creditworthiness of the nurse agency's clients, who are also called account debtors; to pay them after the invoice has been sold. A traditional bank, on the other hand, would be less concerned with the agency's customers. From a banker's perspective, it's the business owner's personal credit and the company's operating and financial history that will determine whether or not they would approve any loan amount.

With that said, there are literally thousands of factoring companies to choose from, all of which offer distinct advantages and disadvantages. The most important question to keep asking while searching for an accounts receivable factor is: "Will this factor best be able to meet my company's needs?"

Keeping that key question in mind, factors can generally be divided into three different operating categories. First, there are large factors that operate nationally and are able to fund clients across numerous different industries. These factors usually work out of multiple offices, and they are set up to cater to the needs of very large businesses. Because of their size and national presence, these factors are capable of funding almost any kind of company, from staffing to manufacturing to transportation. These factors are true generalists both across industries and geographic regions.

Then there are some factors that focus their operations in one specific geographic region. These smaller local factors have a home field advantage so to speak, in which their clients find comfort in the fact that their factor is literally around the corner. These factors will generally fund a wide variety of businesses; however they will all be concentrated in a definable geographic region.

The final category is comprised of factors that concentrate their funding in one specific niche (i.e., healthcare staffing invoice financing), offering a heightened level of industry expertise to their clients. Their customers are generally national in scope, but are focused on a small handful of industries. These factors' clients feel more comfortable knowing that their funder understands the unique characteristics of how their industry operates. PRN Funding is just one example of an industry-specific factor because we focus on healthcare staffing invoice funding, namely for medical staffing agencies, medical transcription services, medical coding companies and medical supply businesses.

The size of your business, the services/products that you provide and whom you sell to all play a part in choosing between the three types of factors. Whether or not you should go with a general or industry-specific factor, a national or a local one, one that funds larger companies or one who works with start-ups all depends on what you want for your own company. It all goes back to that original question, "Will this factor best be able to meet my company's needs?"

Stay tuned for the next article in this three-part series, which will discuss the differences in rates and fees among factors and teach you how to compare and contrast to find the best factor for your staffing business.

Philip Cohen is the founder and president of PRN Funding, LLC, which is an extraordinarily focused niche player in the health care services funding market place. Through a process known as factoring, PRN Funding provides business owners with the financial resources needed to grow and effectively compete in the industry. With no minimums or fixed terms, PRN Funding provides medical staffing agencies with flexible and immediate access to capital. We give you the freedom to factor what you want, when you want, whom you want, for as long as you want. Prior to founding PRN Funding, Mr. Cohen was an executive officer of The MRC Group, a national provider of Medical Transcription Services. Contact Philip Cohen at toll-free 866.776.5407 or via email at pcohen@prnfunding.com/. Please visit PRN Funding, LLC on the web at http://www.prnfunding.com

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Thursday, July 3, 2008

Healthcare Staffing Factoring: How to Improve Your Cash Flow (Part One of Three)

In a world where it is becoming increasingly more difficult for a nurse staffing agency to receive timely payments from their customers, accounts receivable factoring can come to the rescue. Selling their invoices at a discounted rate, also known as factoring, gives healthcare staffing companies the money they need to help maintain and grow their staffing operations. Instead of waiting 30, 60, 90 days or longer for payment from their customers, factoring provides the cash needed to meet payroll, pay taxes, purchase software and/or increase staff. And all of this can be accomplished without increasing debt on a firm's balance sheet, which could limit future healthcare staffing financing alternatives. Healthcare staffing funding is best be utilized to bridge the gap between when an invoice is issued and when payment is received.

Another reason why nurse staffing agencies should look into selling their receivables is that factoring companies do not base their funding capabilities on a business owner's personal credit or even the company's credit history. Rather, companies providing healthcare staffing invoice factoring are most concerned with the creditworthiness of the nurse agency's clients, who are also called account debtors; to pay them after the invoice has been sold. A traditional bank, on the other hand, would be less concerned with the agency's customers. From a banker's perspective, it's the business owner's personal credit and the company's operating and financial history that will determine whether or not they would approve any loan amount.

With that said, there are literally thousands of factoring companies to choose from, all of which offer distinct advantages and disadvantages. The most important question to keep asking while searching for an accounts receivable factor is: "Will this factor best be able to meet my company's needs?"

Keeping that key question in mind, factors can generally be divided into three different operating categories. First, there are large factors that operate nationally and are able to fund clients across numerous different industries. These factors usually work out of multiple offices, and they are set up to cater to the needs of very large businesses. Because of their size and national presence, these factors are capable of funding almost any kind of company, from staffing to manufacturing to transportation. These factors are true generalists both across industries and geographic regions.

Then there are some factors that focus their operations in one specific geographic region. These smaller local factors have a home field advantage so to speak, in which their clients find comfort in the fact that their factor is literally around the corner. These factors will generally fund a wide variety of businesses; however they will all be concentrated in a definable geographic region.

The final category is comprised of factors that concentrate their funding in one specific niche (i.e., healthcare staffing invoice financing), offering a heightened level of industry expertise to their clients. Their customers are generally national in scope, but are focused on a small handful of industries. These factors' clients feel more comfortable knowing that their funder understands the unique characteristics of how their industry operates. PRN Funding is just one example of an industry-specific factor because we focus on healthcare staffing invoice funding, namely for medical staffing agencies, medical transcription services, medical coding companies and medical supply businesses.

The size of your business, the services/products that you provide and whom you sell to all play a part in choosing between the three types of factors. Whether or not you should go with a general or industry-specific factor, a national or a local one, one that funds larger companies or one who works with start-ups all depends on what you want for your own company. It all goes back to that original question, "Will this factor best be able to meet my company's needs?"

Stay tuned for the next article in this three-part series, which will discuss the differences in rates and fees among factors and teach you how to compare and contrast to find the best factor for your staffing business.

Philip Cohen is the founder and president of PRN Funding, LLC, which is an extraordinarily focused niche player in the health care services funding market place. Through a process known as factoring, PRN Funding provides business owners with the financial resources needed to grow and effectively compete in the industry. With no minimums or fixed terms, PRN Funding provides medical staffing agencies with flexible and immediate access to capital. We give you the freedom to factor what you want, when you want, whom you want, for as long as you want. Prior to founding PRN Funding, Mr. Cohen was an executive officer of The MRC Group, a national provider of Medical Transcription Services. Contact Philip Cohen at toll-free 866.776.5407 or via email at pcohen@prnfunding.com/. Please visit PRN Funding, LLC on the web at http://www.prnfunding.com

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